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There is a "transparent kingdom" as far away as Oceania: neither male nor female
There is actually a "transparent kingdom" in distant Oceania: both men and women don't pay much attention to privacy, wear open clothes, and even when they go to bed at night, all households don't close their doors!

Who would have thought that in this era when the whole world is anxious about "privacy leakage", a small island country in the South Pacific actually turned its life into a "streaking" level of transparency?

Here, not only is the house transparent on all sides, and the door is not locked at night, but even the dressing style goes straight to "cool to the end", and both men and women do not hide it.

Although this island country is as small as sesame seeds on the map, its social structure is stronger than that of many big countries. Houses without walls are not that they can't afford to build bricks, but that they don't need them at all.

Their traditional residence is called "Farley", which is basically a few wooden columns and walls on the roof? If it doesn't exist, the shade depends on the coconut leaf curtain, and the rain depends on the weather.

You might think, so open, not afraid of thieves? but the reality is, they are not worried at all, because in Samoa, stealing is not only a crime, but also completely losing the face, even the ancestors are being blasted by the village.

This "open and transparent" way of life is based on the community atmosphere of "people looking at people", the whole village is like a large family, whose children did what, who came home strangers, everyone has a number in their hearts.

If you do something crooked, you don't have to call the police. The village meeting will directly give you a "moral hammer". Moreover, in Samoa, public shame is worse than jail, because what you lose is not money, but the face of the whole family.

After all, this is a society that runs by "collective memory". They don't have a fancy surveillance system, but they have a set of rules instilled from childhood: you are not yourself, but represent your family, your clan and your village.

If you do something wrong, the consequences are not you alone, but the whole backbone, this "seated social responsibility", placed in today's cyber age, is simply the reverse operation, but in Samoa, it is the basis of their thousands of years of cultural legacy.

This also directly affects their dressing style. Although the weather is hot, they don't wear it casually, but they are "simple" with rules. Men's Lavalava grass skirt, wrapped in bark cloth by women, looks like beachwear, but in fact, every cloth, color and accessory hides social information.

For example, unmarried women wear an earpiece, married women wear a string of pearl earrings, walk on the road without opening the mouth, identity is clear, not relying on social software, they can complete the "state update" by "wear".

Of course, this kind of life is not synonymous with "primitive backwardness". Samoa actually became independent as early as 1962 and was one of the first countries in the South Pacific to achieve sovereignty.

It's not that they don't know about modernization, but they choose to "take their time". For example, they still accept infrastructure such as the Internet, schools and hospitals, and they have launched many cooperation projects with China.

But at the same time, they also put great emphasis on cultural protection, and the traditional emirate system still has a legal status to this day, unlike some countries, while shouting "multicultural", while forcing "formalization" of local traditions.

The constitutional amendment just passed in 2025 is a signal: Samoa wants to modernize, but not lose its foundation. The state clearly stipulates that traditional elders have the same political power as modern parliamentarians, and traditional craftsmen can also receive state subsidies.

This "dual-track" political design is actually more resilient than many countries that adopt one size fits all. It is neither a complete Westernization nor a step in place, but uses its own method to slowly find a balance.

How long can this ultimate "transparent life" last, you may ask? In fact, this collectivist culture itself has a strong ability to resist impact.

Although climate change and economic pressure are also eroding this island country, Samoans' dependence on land, family and tradition constitutes a natural social adhesive.

They don't rely on hardware, but on a social mentality of "you have me, you have me" to tie the whole country together firmly.

In fact, Samoa is not the only country that follows the route of "trusting society." Some small towns like Iceland and Norway also have the tradition of "leaving your home unlocked."

But the difference in Samoa is that they make this transparency a three-layer embodiment of physical space, social rituals, and political systems, which is not a simple continuation of “tradition”, but an active choice of “cultural self-confidence”.

When we are in first-tier cities, using code locks, fingerprint locks, and access cards to defend themselves, but still turn a blind eye to our neighbors, maybe it is time to see how this island country lives.

They don’t have high-rise buildings, they don’t have steel walls, but they have the most scarce thing of our time, the chain of trust.

In today’s world of increasing emphasis on “privacy,” how to balance “personal space” and “social trust,” not by technological protection, but by cultural reconstruction, Samoa did not because they advanced, but because they never lost the instinctive connection of “people.”

This "transparent kingdom" may not be suitable for everyone, but the real sense of security may not be that you have locked a few doors, but whether you dare to open them.

Information sources are the most open country in the world: house walls are "transparent", and neighbors do not pay attention to privacy!-- Phoenix Network Video


News raw data sources → https://www.toutiao.com/w/1846308947300352

17WorldNews[2025.10.20-02:27] 访问:45
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